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The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR

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Page 1: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

The Neutral Atmosphere

Dan Marsh

ACD/NCAR

Page 2: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Overview• Thermal structure

– Heating and cooling

• Dynamics– Temperature– Gravity waves– Mean winds and tides

• Composition– Primary constituents– Continuity equation– Minor constituents - ozone, NO– Storm impacts

Page 3: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Thermal structure

Page 4: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Thermodynamic equation

T

t (d T

z)w vT Q

c p

Adiabatic heating

Heat advection

Diabatic heating/cooling

+ …

Page 5: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Sources of diabatic heating/cooling

• Absorption of solar radiation and energetic particles (e.g. ozone)

• Chemical heating through exothermic reactions (A + B -> AB + E)

• Collisions between ions and neutrals (Joule heating)

• IR cooling (e.g. CO2 and NO)• Airglow

Page 6: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Solar radiation energy deposition

Solar

HeatChemicalPotentialO, e,…

QuantumInternal

CO2(2), O2(1)…

UV, Vis.,IR Loss

AirglowCooling

After Mlynczak et al.

Page 7: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Solar UV Energy Deposition

Courtesy Stan Solomon

Page 8: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Hartley continuum

Schumann-Rungecontinuum

S-R Bands

Page 9: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Global average heating rates

From [Roble, 1995]

Page 10: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Joule Heating (K/day)

Heating from collisions between ions and neutrals

Page 11: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Chemical heating through exothermic reactions

H + O3 OH + O2 (k4)

O + O2 + M O3 + M (k2)

O + O + M O2 + M (k1)

O + O3 + O2 + O2 (k3)

OH + O H + O2 (k5)

HO2 + O OH + O2 (k6)

H + O2 + M HO2 + M (k7) K/day

Page 12: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Global average cooling rates

From [Roble, 1995]

Page 13: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Radiative cooling

• IR atomic oxygen emission (63 µm) in the upper thermosphere

• Non-LTE IR emission of NO (5.3 µm) 120 to 200 km

• CO2 15 µm (LTE and non-LTE) important below 120km

• IR emission by ozone and water vapor in the middle atmosphere

Page 14: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

TIMED/SABER observations of

NO cooling

Mly

ncz

ak

et

al.,

Geop

hys.

Res.

Lett

., 3

0(2

1),

20

03

.

Response to the solar storm during April, 2002

Page 15: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Airglow

O2 O3

O2O

Q4

Q2

Q1

Q3

A1

630 nmA2

762 nm

JHJSRC, Ly-a

JH

3P

1D

1∑

A3

1.27 µm

1∆

3∑

g

762 nm

After Mlynczak et al. [1993]

O2 (1∑) emission

Burrage et al. [1994]

Page 16: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Vertical temperature structure (solstice)

Why is the mesopause not at its radiative equilibrium temperature?

Summer Winter

130 K 230 K

WACCM simulations - solar max. conditions

Page 17: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Gravity waves 1.

• Gravity waves are small scale waves mainly generated in the troposphere by mechanisms such as topography, wind shear, and convection.

• Gravity wave amplitudes increase as they propagate upwards (conservation of momentum).

ALT

ITU

DE

65

80

50

After Holton & Alexander [2000]

Page 18: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Mean zonal wind at solstice

UARS reference atmosphere project

E W

Summer Winter

Page 19: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

• Gravity wave momentum deposition drives a meridional circulation from summer to winter hemisphere

• Mass continuity leads to vertical motion and so adiabatic heating in the winter and cooling in the summer. Observed temperatures are 90K warmer in the winter and 60K cooler in summer than radiative equilibrium temperatures

After Holton & Alexander [2000]

LATITUDE

EQ-90 +90

ALT

ITU

DE

Summer Winter

70

80

60

Fx> 0 Fx< 0

Page 20: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Transport affects constituent distributions

Marsh & Roble, 2002UARS reference atmosphere project

Page 21: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

O2, N2

O3

H2O

EQ-90 +90

NoonSR SS

HE

AT

ING

HEATING

HE

AT

ING

LOCAL TIME

LATITUDEHE

IGH

TSchematic representation of

solar heating

After Forbes [1987]

Page 22: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Atmospheric Tides• Atmospheric solar tides are global-

scale waves in winds, temperatures, and pressure with periods that are harmonics of a 24-hour day.

• Migrating tides propagate westward with the apparent motion of the sun

• Migrating tides are thermally driven by the periodic absorption of solar radiation throughout the atmosphere (UV absorption by stratospheric ozone and IR absorption by water vapor in the troposphere.

• Non-migrating tides are also present in the upper atmosphere and can be caused by latent heat release from deep tropical convection or the interaction of tides and gravity waves

QuickTime™ and aGIF decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 23: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Meriodinal wind at noon local time observed by UARS

McLandress et al. [1996]

Page 24: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

GSWM-98 migrating diurnal tide (Equinox)

Hagan et al. [1999]

Page 25: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

GSWM-98 migrating semi-diurnal tide

Page 26: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Hagan et al. [2001]

Migrating thermospheric

tides

Page 27: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Many waves are always present

Simulated winds at the equator

Migrating diurnal component Combined field

Page 28: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Composition

Page 29: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Primary constituent

Nitrogen

Oxygen

Helium

Hydrogen

0 km

200 km

700 km

2,500 km

Page 30: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Total density height variation

Ideal gas law

Hydrostatic balance

where

Page 31: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Which leads to:

In the “homosphere,” where eddy diffusion tends to mix the atmosphere, the mean molecular weight is almost constant (m ~ 28.96 amu), and the density will decrease with a mean scale height of ~ 7km.

Above about 90km, constituents tend to diffuse with their own scale height (Hi = kT/mig) as the mean free path becomes longer. This is the “heterosphere.” The ith constituent (assuming no significant sources or sinks) will have the following gradient:

Constituents with low mass will fall off less rapidly with height, leading to diffusive separation.

Page 32: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Diffusive separation

From Richmond [1983]

Turbopause

Page 33: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

To recap…

• Above the turbopause (~105km), molecular diffusion causes constituents to drop off according to their mass.

• Below, the atmosphere is fully mixed:

• 78%N2, 21%O2, <1% Ar, <0.1% CO2

• Density decreases with a mean scale height: H = kT/mg ~7km

• The lower thermosphere is also the transition from a molecular to atomic atmosphere.

Page 34: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

If there’s chemical production or loss of a minor constituent then this equality will not hold and a diffusive flux occurs. Above the turbopause this will be:

Where Di is the diffusion coefficient:

Recall:

What about chemistry?

Page 35: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

From Richmond [1983]

Page 36: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Continuity equationThe total diffusive flux will include both molecular and eddy diffusion terms:

So, neglecting transport, we now have a continuity equation for the ith constituent:

Page 37: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

The distribution of ozone

Page 38: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Chapman chemistry

O2 h O O

O O2 M O3 M

O3 h O2 O

O O M O2 M

O O3 2O2

Zonal mean Ox loss rates 2.5ºN

Page 39: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Catalytic cycles

O OH O2 H

H O2 M HO2 M

O HO2 O2 OH

net : 2O O2

O OH O2 H

H O3 O2 OH

net : O O3 2O2

Mesosphere

[GSFC, NASA]

Stratosphere

Page 40: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Nitric Oxide in the lower-thermosphere

Production:

N(2D) + O2 NO + O (fast)

N(4 S) + O2 NO + O (slow)

Loss:

NO + h N(4 S) + O

N(4 S) +NO N2 + O

[a "canabalistic" reaction]

Equatorial NO

(Barth et al., 2003)

Page 41: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Produced by (1-10 keV) precipitating electrons and solar soft X-rays (2-7 nm)

N(2D) production mechanisms

electron impact :

N2 e* N(2D)+N

(e * secondary/photo - electron)

dissociative recombination :

e.g. NO+ + e N(2D)+ O

Page 42: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Thermosphere: SNOE Nitric Oxide Obs. 3 EOFs = 80% of var.

Page 43: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Solar forcing of the neutral atmosphere

• UV/EUV• Precipitating particles in

auroral regions• Solar proton events (SPEs)• Highly-relativistic electrons

(HREs) >1MeV• Galactic cosmic rays

Page 44: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

upper panel: WACCM temperature, ozone, and water vapor for July solar minimum conditions.lower panel: Solar min/max percentage differences. Data only plotted where differences are statistically significant (95% confidence level).

Page 45: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

MLS ozone (30S-30N) vs.

200-205 nm solar flux

Hood & Zhou, 1998

Mesosphere/Stratosphere response

DeLand et al., 2003

Page 46: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

[NASA LWS report]

Page 47: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Solar Proton Ionization Rates

Page 48: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

Coupling processes• Downward transport of

thermospheric nitric oxide by ~1keV electrons

• NOy production in lower mesosphere and upper stratosphere via energetic electron precipitation (4-1000 keV)

• Both processes lead to stratospheric ozone destruction

Callis et al. 1998

POAMII ozone SH 30km

Randall et al. 1998

(2xAp)

Page 49: The Neutral Atmosphere Dan Marsh ACD/NCAR. Overview Thermal structure –Heating and cooling Dynamics –Temperature –Gravity waves –Mean winds and tides

The End